I’m aware… But apparently too stupid to see that you were continuing with the joke 🤣
Anyhoo… here’s an upvote 😉
I’m aware… But apparently too stupid to see that you were continuing with the joke 🤣
Anyhoo… here’s an upvote 😉
that’s the translation of the Arabic part
I miss Google Now… just swipe, and all the relevant information is there. No need to prompt it, no need to wait for a response, and no audio noise to get the information I need.
It was perfect for my needs.
yep… you’re right… I didn’t notice that. The story’s still funny though (⁀ᗢ⁀)
edit: looking at it through Google Street View, the picture in the post was actually taken from the Sean O’Casey bridge XD
I chuckle a bit every time I see that bridge 😁
https://www.thejournal.ie/sean-ocasey-bridge-remote-1713102-Oct2014/
I remember that one 😊
There was another version called Oddballz … It had some weird beasts, but still very cute 🥺
I think I still have the original CD set somewhere . I should probably find 👻
I’ve been happy with the Simple Tab Groups extension, but built-in support would be welcome, since it would have better access than an extension.
I’m not sure where ConnectBot stores its keys, so I can’t help with the ‘transferring to termux’ part :-)
What I can tell you is that you should be able to generate and use SSH keys directly in Termux. Here’s a quick guide on how to do it: https://gist.github.com/evandrocoan/f503188587587d7b1d1ba8746c9c6107
I’ve switched phones recently, and I haven’t set up my keys yet, but as far as I recall I went through a similar process a few years ago to set up SSH keys on my phone (I haven’t tried the steps in that article myself).
You use a keyboard and a peinter? weak! I throw magnets over the memory chips and use a multi-meter. /l334
A Nokia 3100 … it was the first phone I bought, and I kept it through college and beyond.
The thing was a beast :-)
128x128 pixel screen, with 12-bit RGB. No WiFi, no Bluetooth. Had some web access with WAP (no not that! “Wireless Access Protocol”). It did have a camera module though /rofl
And best of all, the battery lasted a week!
I’ve been running the same installation since 2012.
obligatory: “arch, btw”
because sometimes you need to investiagte an issue that happens only on the production machines, and you can’t/shouldn’t setup debugging on those.
prosider: duct.
Mirror, mirror, on the wall Show my single camera to all
I’ve used Arch on an RPi 2 back in the day. It works just fine, and fun to play with. But at the end of the day, you don’t want things changing every day on a server. I’d recommend going with Raspberry Pi OS; it’s relatively light, well maintained, and just works.
<Batman enters stage left>
🤨
Some tab grouping extensions use it to hide tabs that are not in the currently displayed group.